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Bristol Herald Courier wins Pulitzer prize PDF Print E-mail

BRISTOL HERALD COURIER

BRISTOL, Va. – The Bristol Herald Courier won journalism’s top prize Monday – the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service – for exposing a system that allowed energy corporations to drain natural gas belonging to thousands of landowners without compensating them.

The eight-day series, which began in December 2009, explored how gas ownership conflicts have led an obscure but powerful state board to funnel tens of millions of dollars of royalties into escrow over 20 years. Investigative reporter Daniel Gilbert’s research revealed that gas corporations – virtually unwatched by state regulations – had failed to pay royalties into escrow.

Since the series ran, two gas corporations have paid more than $1 million in delinquent royalties, and the General Assembly has passed legislation designed to release royalties held in escrow to landowners; it is awaiting the governor’s signature to become law.

The newspaper created – and continues to update – an online searchable database of monthly escrow statements, enabling landowners to investigate their stake in escrow for the first time.

“This is proof that it’s not the size of the newspaper but the size of its heart, soul and its watchdog teeth,” said J. Todd Foster, the Herald Courier’s editor. “To win the top Pulitzer and to see the Bristol Herald Courier name above The New York Times and The Washington Post on a list of Pulitzer winners is incredibly gratifying and a testament to the excellent journalism practiced here.”

The Pulitzer is the first for the 139-year-old Herald Courier.

“I couldn’t be more proud of and grateful to Daniel Gilbert and Todd Foster for leading the charge to our becoming a Pulitzer prize-winning newspaper,” said Carl Esposito, the newspaper’s publisher. “This is surely the most exciting thing I’ve ever experienced in my career, and it is a privilege to share this moment with such a great team.”

The Herald Courier won the award over two other finalists – a joint New York Times-ProPublica effort and the Asbury Park (N.J.) Press. The Times-ProPublica story “exposed gaps in California’s oversight of dangerous and incompetent nurses, blending investigative scrutiny and multimedia storytelling to produce corrective changes.”

Asbury Park was named a Pulitzer finalist for its “exhaustive examination of how an archaic property tax system harms New Jersey’s economy and ordinary families, using stories and interactive databases to spark pledges of statewide reform.”

The Herald Courier series, called “Underfoot, Out of Reach,” already had won two other national awards: The Scripps Howard National Journalism Award and the Investigative Reporters and Editors Award.


EARLIER TODAY

NEW YORK (AP) - The Herald Courier of Bristol, Va., has won the Pulitzer Prize for public service for reporting on the mismanagement of natural gas royalties owed to landowners in Virginia.

You can view all the articles in this winning series, as well as access a database of escrow accounts, here.

The Washington Post won four Pulitzers on Monday, for international reporting, feature writing, commentary and criticism.

ProPublica, a nonprofit investigative-journalism service, won one of two Pulitzers awarded for investigative reporting for a story on the life-and-death decisions made by doctors at a New Orleans hospital during Hurricane Katrina. The story was a collaboration with The New York Times Magazine.

The Pulitzers are the most prestigious awards in journalism and are given out annually by Columbia University on the recommendation of a board of distinguished journalists and others. Each award carries a $10,000 prize except for the public service award, which is a gold medal.

http://www2.tricities.com/tri/news/local/article/bristol_herald_courier_wins_pulitzer_prize/44443/

 

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